The 66-year-old has been charged in the August slaying of Anthony "Glenn" Maupin.

Matthews spent most of his recorded police interview angrily yelling with no detectives in the room.

In fact, Matthews appeared to be confused why he was even there.

"What did I did? Bring it to me. What did I did?" Matthews can be seen asking on the tape.

Maupin was found bleeding badly near a porch on the 200 block of West Kenton Street.

Neighbors called 911 while they tried to save him.

Maupin died at University Hospital 40 minutes later from stab wounds to his chest and hip.

“I'm going to let you know that you at this time are being charged with murder,” a detective told Matthews on the tape.

“You should be getting the person that hurt my friend. You should be, you should be after him," Matthews responded.

Witnesses told police the stabbing happened after an argument between the two men who were described as good friends.

One witness said Maupin escalated the argument.

“No hesitation. He just hit him and knocked him to the ground. And then, you know, I could see him going over the black man like he was just going to keep beating him,” a witness said in an interview with police.

Witnesses also said they watched Matthews walk through this alley after the stabbing and head to his apartment right around the corner.

"He said, ‘I stuck him.’ And I said, ‘Why?’ And that's when he just started walking off," another witness said in an interview with police.

Matthews was arrested soon after Maupin was stabbed and was placed in a police cruiser.

Detectives found blood on his clothing.

“I got to talk to a lawyer. I want to talk to a lawyer. You cannot deny me talking to a lawyer, are you crazy?" Matthews said in the interview.